Waddell v. City of Williamson

127 S.E. 396, 98 W. Va. 547, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 80
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1925
DocketNo. 5053.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 127 S.E. 396 (Waddell v. City of Williamson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waddell v. City of Williamson, 127 S.E. 396, 98 W. Va. 547, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 80 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Hatci-ieR, Judge:

Plaintiff’s husband was fire chief of the city of Williamson. At the time of the injury herein complained of, he was responding to a fire call in his own automobile. At the place of injury there was a paved street sixteen feet wide. This street was within and maintained by the city. Mr. Waddell’s rate of speed was estimated at from fifteen to twenty-five miles per hour. In passing another automobile, he swung his car to the left until its outside wheels dropped into a ditch just off the .paved street. Without cheeking his speed, he proceeded along the ditch for about sixty feet, tugging at his steering wheel mightily in his effort to get his car back on the paved road. When he succeeded in steering it out of the ditch, the car, “in a thought,” shot across the street at about the same angle as it came from the ditch, and plunged some two - hundred feet down an unguarded declivity. He died from injuries thereby received.

The defendant offered evidence that the steering gear of the car ivas in bad order, .and that the deceased was under the influence of intoxicants at the time. This was denied by witnesses for plaintiff.

The jury returned a verdict of $5,000.00 for the plaintiff. On motion of defendant, the trial court set aside the verdict and awarded it a new trial. A writ of error sought by the plaintiff brought the case here.

The plaintiff contends that the ditch in question rendered the street out of repair, within the meaning of the statute, and was the proximate cau'se of the death of Mr. Waddell. The defendant denies that the ditch was a part of the street, and contends that his death was due either to the defective steering gear of his automobile, to his intoxicated condition, *549 or to his reckless driving. The plaintiff would have ns say that the law and the evidence warranted the verdict and have ns enter judgment on the verdict. The defendant would have us hold as a matter of law that its street was not out of repair because of the ditch, and that in any event, Mr. Waddell was guilty of such contributory negligence as bars a recovery for his death.

Section 167 of chapter 43, Code, as construed in Williams v. Coal Co., 83 W. Va. 464, and other cases by this court, makes the duty of a municipality to keep its streets in repair an absolute duty. The same cases, however, recognize contributory negligence as a valid defense to an injury from a defect in a road or street. If Mr. Waddell had been' a private citizen at the time of his injury, we might be warranted in holding that his conduct was so palpably negligent as to bar recovery for his death. Conduct ordinarily considered reckless in a private citizen may not necessarily be improvident on the part of a fire chief. A member of a fire company may take greater risks than a private citizen and yet be within the rule of ordinary care.

“The duties of a member of the city fire department, when driving fire apparatus on a call to a fire, may require him to take risks which it would be negligence for a private person to take in pursuit of his private business.”
Warren v. Mendenhall, (Minn.) 79 N. W. 661.

In its opinion in this case, the court says:

“It is often the duty of a fireman, when attending a fire or responding to a fire alarm, to act, regardless of a considerable degree of danger to himself. To hesitate or stop at every slight indication of danger might often be a dastardly failure of duty on his part. His duties are of a public character, and in cities of a considerable size these duties are exceedingly important. On many occasions, his instant and fearless action is imperatively necessary to prevent widespread disaster, the loss of property, or the loss of life, or both; and when he is called, he seldom knows the urgency of the -occasion until he arrives upon the ground.”

*550 To the same effect is the reasoning of the court of Wisconsin, in the ease of Hanlon v. Milwaukee Electric Ry. & Light Co., 95 N. W. 100:

“Among those things which distinguish the conduct of the driver of fire apparatus from others is, primarily, the duty and necessity of great speed. The loss of moments may mean destruction of lives or property. The public purpose which such men and appliances serve would be defeated by the hesitation and caution which does and should characterize the ordinary traveler. To serve this public purpose, the driver must and does seize every opportunity to make expedition. He takes chances, in deference to the imperative necessity for speed, which would be wholly unjustifiable otherwise. These things firemen do. These things they must do. The conclusion seems irresistible, either that they are consistent with ordinary care under those circumstances, or 'that the ordinarily prudent man cannot hold a position in the fire department. ’ ’

Nevertheless, a fireman must use ordinary care for his own safety:

£ ‘ Of course, such a fireman must use ordinary care. Ordinary care is care commensurate with the occasion ; and, when the dangers are great, it may be a very high degree of care. When a fireman’s duty requires him to take great risks, the rule of ordinary care may require him to be exceedingly alert and watchful to prevent injury to himself and others, but still that rule may not prohibit him from venturing into the danger.”
Warren v. Mendenhall, supra.

We held in Williams v. Coal Co., supra, in Chambers v. Princeton Power Co., 117 S. E. 480, and in other cases, that ordinarily the question of negligence, as well as that of contributory negligence should be submitted to the jury. This principle is sustained and applied to cases like the one under consideration by the weight of authority.

“In an action by such a member against a street-railway company for damages for an injury to him *551 resulting from a collision, at a street crossing, between a street ear and a book and ladder truck driven by him, held, that the question of defendant’s negligence and of the contributory negligence were both for the jury.”
Warren v. Mendenhall, supra.
“Whether plaintiff, the driver of a hose cart, injured in a collision with a street ear at a crossing while driving to a fire, was guilty of contributory negligence in attempting to cross ahead of the car, was for the jury.”
Hanlon v. Milwaukee Electric Ry. & Light Co., supra.
‘1 The question of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff was one also for the jury.” * * *
“The conduct of the plaintiff was for the consideration -of the jury. He took the usual risks of an employment of a dangerous character, but he did not assume the risks of the insecurity of streets resulting from the culpable negligence of the city.

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Bluebook (online)
127 S.E. 396, 98 W. Va. 547, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waddell-v-city-of-williamson-wva-1925.